It is not entirely clear why they specify a 15w50 or 20w50 motor oil for this application.
Some people think it is just a lazy spec, which goes like "oh well motor oils are easy to get so why not"
There are some who think the multigrade SAE viscosity they ask for is optimal for the high heat, high oil pressure app.
We do not have a detailed explanation of their reasons, but we do not have much of a choice, other than following
the manufacturer's recommendation. The only choice I see is selecting a traditional or synthetic oil, fitting the
known parameters they spec-ed.
I have seen motor oil spec-ed in lawn tractor tranny's too, my Scotts tranny asked for the
same thing, 20w50 motor oil, so this is nothing new.
From what I gather, the requirements are some minimal level HTHS, 15w50 or 20w50,
I think there is an implied high anti-wear and anti-oxidant additive content "ask" here,
as the heavy multigrades specified do not limit the anti-wear additives, neither would the ancient SF spec or whatever
they actually asked for.
I prefer synthetics for stability over a long time. For me that translates to some mostly pao or gtl+pao mix oil.
I talked to M1 support, and they confirm that the M1 15w50 red label synthetic is a recommended product
for this application. So that is one safe bet.
There are some oils that seem to be custom engineered for these hydros, e.g.: amsoil . I imagine the specific requirements
could be obtained by lubricant formulators, so that they can design a product that is optimal. Those 2 ( m1 and Amsoil) would be my top
2 choices for this.
I see no point of paying the unreasonably high prices for the OEM branded "hydro fluids" (Stens, Gravely, Scag, Hustler, Hydrogear etc... they all have their own brand) ,
which are either of undislosed composition (often mineral), or just rebranded synth blend/synthetic motor oils.
Some people think it is just a lazy spec, which goes like "oh well motor oils are easy to get so why not"
There are some who think the multigrade SAE viscosity they ask for is optimal for the high heat, high oil pressure app.
We do not have a detailed explanation of their reasons, but we do not have much of a choice, other than following
the manufacturer's recommendation. The only choice I see is selecting a traditional or synthetic oil, fitting the
known parameters they spec-ed.
I have seen motor oil spec-ed in lawn tractor tranny's too, my Scotts tranny asked for the
same thing, 20w50 motor oil, so this is nothing new.
From what I gather, the requirements are some minimal level HTHS, 15w50 or 20w50,
I think there is an implied high anti-wear and anti-oxidant additive content "ask" here,
as the heavy multigrades specified do not limit the anti-wear additives, neither would the ancient SF spec or whatever
they actually asked for.
I prefer synthetics for stability over a long time. For me that translates to some mostly pao or gtl+pao mix oil.
I talked to M1 support, and they confirm that the M1 15w50 red label synthetic is a recommended product
for this application. So that is one safe bet.
There are some oils that seem to be custom engineered for these hydros, e.g.: amsoil . I imagine the specific requirements
could be obtained by lubricant formulators, so that they can design a product that is optimal. Those 2 ( m1 and Amsoil) would be my top
2 choices for this.
I see no point of paying the unreasonably high prices for the OEM branded "hydro fluids" (Stens, Gravely, Scag, Hustler, Hydrogear etc... they all have their own brand) ,
which are either of undislosed composition (often mineral), or just rebranded synth blend/synthetic motor oils.